Can Privacy Survive AI?
Josephine Yam, JD, LLM, MA (AI Ethics)
AI Lawyer | Skills4Good AI Co-Founder | TEDx Speaker | Empowering Professionals with Responsible AI through Community Learning
In a World of AI, Privacy Is Under Siege.
Imagine this: AI-powered smart glasses that instantly reveal personal details about anyone in your view. Two Harvard students recently modified Meta’s smart glasses to do just that, pulling up names, addresses - even phone numbers - on the spot. This experiment shows the uneasy truth:
Can privacy survive in a world fueled by AI?
Why This Matters
Privacy isn’t just data; it’s about who we are and our right to decide how, when, and why our information is used. But as AI grows, so do the privacy risks.
The power struggle between individuals and companies collecting data raises urgent ethical questions.
Our Key Takeaway?
Data Minimization: Collect only what’s essential. Less data means less to protect, reducing privacy risks and building trust.
Steps You Can Take
What Do You Think?
Is privacy still possible in today’s AI-driven world? Or is it time to rethink our expectations?
Share your comments here!
P.S. Want the full newsletter? Subscribe here: https://skills4good.ai/newsletter/
P.S. Get Ready for 2025 with Our Holiday BOGO Offer!
This season, learn Responsible AI with a friend! With our Buy One, Gift One (BOGO) offer, you and a partner can tackle AI literacy together - gaining the confidence and skills for 2025.
Start your Responsible AI journey today! Explore our BOGO promotion here: https://skills4good.ai/membership/achiever/
Highly Experienced investment professional & Scientifically Wired Health Nut??
2 周Once you have a cell phone, your privacy is no more. You need to assume that if multinationals cannot protect the data of their clients, what chance do any other companies have? Hospitals? Credit bureaus? Credit card companies? OMG it's a nightmare.
COO at Skills4Good AI, AI Upskilling as a Force for Good
2 周Forgetful AI could be a game-changer for privacy. Do you think tech like this can help us take back control of our data?
Data minimization is a powerful way to protect privacy. What’s one way you’re applying this principle in your work?